How to Create Urgency in Marketing to Boost Your Conversions (17 Tips)

There’s no doubt about it: if you want to improve conversions on your site and in your marketing, urgency’s one of the most important tactics to master.

We all know it works. Black Friday and Cyber Monday sales bring huge returns – more than $50 billion in 2017 – because once those deals are gone, it’ll be at least a year till something just as good comes along.

In this article, we’re going to explore how to create urgency in marketing so you can increase leads and sales.

Why Urgency Works

The reason why we all feel the urge to grab those deals is psychological. There are two factors at play.

First, urgent situations push us to act, either to prolong positive emotions and reduce negative ones. That’s just the way we’re wired.

Second: Urgency also evokes loss aversion, which marketers call the fear of missing out (FOMO). We don’t want to miss a great opportunity, especially if others are grabbing it.

In both cases, we can’t help feeling the urge to go for it before it’s too late.

There’s one more important factor, though: the product or service has to be useful, important or valuable, otherwise the technique will fail. If people don’t want what you have to offer, using urgency won’t help.

Now, let’s get to the tips. We’ve divided them into message design, message context, and message delivery.

Step 1. Create and Design Your Message

First, let’s look at how to create a sense of urgency in writing and designing your message. From language use to personalization and imagery, these tips will help you master this important strategy.

1. Use Urgency in Moderation

A scientific study into urgency shows that when people see urgency as a manipulative tactic, it’s much less effective.

If everything is always on sale and about to run out, pretty soon your visitors will stop believing your urgency claims. You’ll lose their trust, which will make it even harder to market to them in the future.

Instead, keep it real, and use urgency and scarcity in moderation. Then your customers will trust you, and look forward to your next offer.

2. Use the Right Language

Wondering how to create urgency without being pushy? One key part of this is the language you use. The right phrases and expressions can create an atmosphere of urgency and scarcity, and they’re the words you see around you every day when someone is offering a sale.

Some common urgency words and phrases include:

Time (limited time, last time, now, today only, deadline, seconds, minutes)

Some of these overap, but you get the idea. Check out our ultimate list of 700 power words for more examples and inspiration.

3. Make Your CTA Active and Urgent

Related to language, it’s essential to get your call to action (CTA) right.

A good CTA will inspire visitors to take action and click to take up your offer. That’s why it’s so important. One way to create urgency with your CTA is to pair active words with some of the urgent words we saw in the last tip.

For example, you can use phrases like:

Book Now

Act Today

Act Now

Buy Now

Claim Your Discount Today

Growth Marketing’s email combines an urgent CTA with the image of a clock to suggest the need to act fast:

Wondering how to create urgency in email marketing? If you’re marketing your offer via an email newsletter, there are two key areas to get right so people open your emails.

First, there’s the subject line, which tells people what your email is about. Typically, when you’re showing urgency and scarcity, the email subject line will mention the sale, or will tie into the reason for the sale in some way.

In the example below, some subject lines use Black Friday messaging, while another looks ahead to Christmas with “Santa came early” messaging.

Since most people are already primed for great, time-limited deals at this time of year, that may be enough to get people to open the emails.

But some people need more, and that’s where the preheader text (the bit that you see in your inbox next to the subject line) comes in. The preheader text is another chance to use urgency words and help people want to buy.

A good preheader summarizes what’s in the email or adds more context so people want to read it. In our example below, the pre-header text is used to confirm there’s a deal and to make subscribers feel included with a sneak peek.

Personalization has become a huge marketing trend, and it goes way beyond using your subscriber’s first name in email marketing. Sure, people will pay attention to their own name, but beyond that, you’ll have more success if your urgent offers are tailored to what your visitors and customers are already interested in.

Major online retailers do this all the time by showing you products related to what you’ve already seen.

And if they can highlight scarcity and urgency at the same time, that makes the case to buy even more compelling.

You can also make marketing personal with OptinMonster. Say your subscriber has shown an interest in travel in South Africa. You send an email with a link to a page where you’re offering a deal. Then you can combine page-level targeting and dynamic text replacement to create an urgent offer tailored to that visitor.

To use page-level targeting with OptinMonster, follow our instructions for creating your first campaign. Then navigate to Display Rules » Who should see the campaign? » Visitors browsing specific pages, and enter the URL of the page where you want your offer to appear.

FOMO – or the fear of missing out – is another type of urgency that’s known to push people to act, because we’re hardwired to hate losing out and to want to win. One way to use FOMO in this social media era is to lace your marketing with user-generated content (UGC).

When customers see others using your products and services, and getting a great deal, it makes them want to do the same. In fact, 68% of millennials will make a purchase in an effort not to be left behind by their peers.

Several brands are using UGC effectively in marketing to improve brand awareness and drive sales. For example, Wayfair combines photos from users with home design inspiration in its #wayfairathome hashtag on Instagram and Twitter:

7. Use Big Numbers

Marketing Land gives another example of how to create urgency in sales by using large numbers that function as a form of social proof. Some customers are driven by promised results, and if the numbers look good, that’s enough of an incentive to take the deal.

For example, Hiten Shah includes a rolling total of the number of website visits used to inform his content marketing guide:

Step 2. Set the Context

In the last section, we saw how to create urgency with language and message design. Now, we’re going to look at some of the ways to ramp that up in your onsite and email marketing. While our examples are taken from websites, these sales will also be highlighted in email and social media marketing.

9. Highlight the Competition

If lots of people are going for the same deal, that automatically creates urgency. So show how popular a deal is or how many people are competing for it to up the ante in terms of urgency.

For example, Amazon makes some deals available only to a certain number of people. On site, it shows the takeup percentage for each deal. So when more than 90% of the allowed numbers have taken it, that makes it more urgent for the rest.

Booking.com uses a couple of techniques. For example, when looking at some hotels, it’ll show which ones are the best deals with a button saying “Great Value Today”.

And it’ll also make booking even more urgent by showing, in red, how many people are looking at particular accommodation right this minute:

10. Display Stock Levels

Showing how much of an item’s in stock can help to underline urgency. After all, who knows when – or if – a desirable item will be back. Most online retailers use this technique. Amazon highlights out of stock – or nearly out of stock items in red:

11. Create Urgency Within Urgency

Even if you already have a time-limited offer, you can create even more urgency in marketing with different sale types that offer something extra to those prepared to move fast.

For example, you can use a doorbuster sale, which lets you offer a few extra bargains at the start of a sale period. This gets people on to your site or through the door, and can lead to you selling other items that visitors weren’t even looking for. Here’s an example of a doorbuster sale from Best Buy:

You can also create a marketing pressure point with a sale within a sale. For example, you can include a daily deal at a great price, to encourage people to shop immediately, or launch a flash one-day sale, as in this example from Living Social:

Or you can run a beat the clock sale, offering decreasing discounts as the sale goes on. Here’s an example of that from the Chemical Guys:

12. Focus on Delivery

When considering how to create urgency in marketing, think about deliver options for the products you’re selling. Highlighting these can help to trigger FOMO, underlining the need for urgent action.

For example, during the holiday marketing season, you can show when people need to order items to get their ideal delivery options, like same day or next day delivery, or by a certain date, as in this example from Amazon:

If customers have to purchase a certain amount to get free shipping, you can show that, too. Free shipping is one of the most important incentives for customers, so this can help them make the decision to buy enough to reach that goal.

13. Make It Exclusive

You know what makes getting a deal even better? Knowing that you’ve gotten access to something not everyone can.

Exclusivity is proven to drive sales, and can be a big part of using urgency in marketing. It’s another way to trigger FOMO, and it works.

Just think about the example of Amazon Prime, which now has more than 80 million subscribers. For an annual subscription, that program includes:

“Pre-Suasion” is a term used by marketing expert Robert Cialdini. (His book of the same name is listed among our best marketing books roundup.)

As Forbes explains, this technique is about capturing attention to prime people to be receptive to your offer. For example, when retailers show what other people viewing the same item have bought, they’re using pre-suasion to prime you to buy one of those items.

To create urgency with content locking, follow our guide and create an inline campaign. Then go to Optin » Content Blocking and configure it to either blur (called obfuscation) or remove the text below the campaign.

Hit Publish, and grab the embed code or WordPress shortcode. Paste this into your post to enable content locking.

17. Send Abandonment Emails

Finally, if people leave your site without buying something, you can still create urgency with shopping cart abandonment emails.

Marketo suggests you send the first one within a few hours of abandonment, so people still remember what they put in the cart, and might still be interested in buying it.

Next, send a reminder that discounts are about to expire, which will make some people act.

Finally, offer an additional, time-limited discount, using some of the language we suggested in the early part of this guide.

Sharon Hurley Hall has been a professional writer for more than 25 years, and is certified in content marketing and email marketing. Her career has included stints as a journalist, blogger, university lecturer, and ghost writer.

We're glad you have chosen to leave a comment. Please keep in mind that all comments are moderated according to our privacy policy, and all links are nofollow. Do NOT use keywords in the name field. Let's have a personal and meaningful conversation.

Stop Losing Customers!

Join 700,000+ who get more subscribers and customers with the power of OptinMonster.